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Usenet Posted 22 years ago
Usage

Is the sentence grammatically correct?

Hi! I'm writing an argumentative essay on the following topic: Acts of terrorism are justifiable.
I have a problem concerning the last sentence of
the first paragraph.
Is the sentence correct? '' it seems reasonable for a high values-led society to refer to humanitarian reasons and other moral aspects in saying 'no' to terrorists.
Is it possible to say ''high values-led society"?
Is it a grammatically correct sentence? Does it make sense?

I would be grateful for any any help or advice.Thanks.

best regards,
Mariusz
  

Top answer

[nq:1]Hi! I'm writing an argumentative essay on the following topic: Acts of terrorism are justifiable. I have a problem concerning ...

  • [nq:1]Hi!
  • I'm writing an argumentative essay on the following topic: Acts of terrorism are justifiable.
  • I have a problem concerning ...
  • Is it a grammatically correct sentence?
  • Does it make sense?
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7 Answers
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[nq:1]Hi! I'm writing an argumentative essay on the following topic: Acts of terrorism are justifiable. I have a problem concerning ... Is it a grammatically correct sentence? Does it make sense? I would be grateful for any any help or advice.Thanks.[/nq]
It makes (English) sense to me, in that I understand what you're trying to say, but adjectival constructions of the 'high-values-led' type c
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Thank you for Your help dr Robin Bignall.
It's good to know that you can find here such educated people willing to help.;-)
best regards,
Mariusz
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[nq:1]Hi! I'm writing an argumentative essay on the following topic: Acts of terrorism are justifiable. I have a problem concerning ... to humanitarian reasons and other moral aspects in saying 'no' to terrorists. Is it possible to say ''high values-led society"?[/nq]
Yes. But I think the concept is unclear. What do you mean? Are religious values "high value"? Or do you mean putting a high val
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[nq:1]Is it possible to say ''high values-led society"? Is it a grammatically correct sentence? Does it make sense?[/nq]
In any case, in this construction "value", used as part of an adjective, has to be singular, even if it refers to more than one value.

If you mean a society living on a high montain, led by values, say "high value-led society".
If yoy mean a society led by high
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[nq:1]If you mean a society living on a high montain, led by values, say "highvalue-led society". If yoy mean a society led by high values, say "high-value-led" society[/nq]
I wasn't aware such a slight difference changes the sense. One hyphen makes such a difference?
[nq:1]If it is important to you that people should understand what you are saying, say "a society led by high values". Mult
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To most Americans, it probably won't make a difference, but then you'd best eliminate all hyphens.
To illustrate what difference a hyphen can make I have scanned and uploaded (171 KB) to http://snipurl.com/aaqq some pages from "Eats, Shoots & Leaves" by Lynne Truss, a book that m
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Thanks! The books is definitely worth reading especially for those writing in English. I know the remark is obvious but at the moment as a part of my Writing classes I'm obliged to write an essay every two weeks so it might appear useful. Such a gentle difference and the sense is different. I'll look for the book in my local language bookshop and who knows mayby I'll purchase it if the price is ac

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